up and coming: ceramist jesse wine on making art ......mary mary sharp, rob, artsy, 07.10.15 (2/10)...
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MARY MARY
Up and Coming: Ceramist Jesse Wine on Making Art
Accessible
ARTSY EDITORIAL
BY ROB SHARPOCT 7TH, 2015 7:56 PM
Portrait of Jesse Wine by Kate Berry for Artsy.
Elephant and Castle is one of South London’s most diverse districts. A
bustling pocket of Latin American, West African, and Central Asian
cultures, among many others, it is now the site of a long-awaited £3
billion regeneration project that makes recent protests in East London
over gentrification seem marginal and obsolete.
County Street, a short walk from “the Elephant,” as it is known in the
capital, is a quiet enclave within that melee, a thoroughfare of terraces
and lockups, some of which are used as project spaces, workshops, and
studios. A replica of Trafalgar Square’s Fourth Plinth—Stephen Hall and
LiLi Ren’s work for the street’s Cul De Sac Gallery—nestles at the road’s
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terminus. Skip next door to that gallery’s neighbor, and you’ll witness yetanother iteration of the area’s varied makeup.
Photo by Kate Berry for Artsy.
The workspace of up-and-coming ceramist Jesse Wine houses a towering,multi-faceted sculpture for Frieze London when I catch him a coupleweeks ahead of the fair. In addition to this piece, earmarked for Frieze’sSculpture Park, Wine is preparing a solo presentation for his London
Cool definition II, 2015 Cool definition I, 2015 Djokovic vs Federer, 2015Jesse Wine
Mary Mary
Jesse Wine
Mary Mary
Jesse Wine
Limoncello
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gallery Limoncello—part of Focus, a section dedicated to emerginggalleries—and will also have work on view with Glasgow representativeMary Mary. Engaging and gregarious, Wine enthusiastically elaborates onthe Sculpture Park project’s genesis: a reimagining of habitual collectionsof dried fruit from his father’s kitchen sideboard.
Photo by Kate Berry for Artsy.
“He would stack fruit in these little piles and me and my brother woulddo it with him,” says 31-year-old Wine when we speak. (He’ll turn 32mid-way through Frieze’s run.) “It was like playing, in a way. It was myfirst legitimate experience of something you might call art—taking aninexplicable, really idiosyncratic approach to something that is in someway familiar. So much of it informs the way I work now, but it’s takenme forever to figure that out.”
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Portrait of Jesse Wine by Kate Berry for Artsy.
Sharp, Rob, Artsy, 07.10.15 (4/10)
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Photo by Kate Berry for Artsy.
Wine’s work often mimetically explores his own life, whether hischildhood in Chester (a small city in northwest England) or in his glazedinterpretations of the clothing he wears, the way he sits, or the output ofthe artists he admires. He has won plaudits for his two solo shows atLimoncello and for his first institutional exhibition, “Young man red,” atthe BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead in 2014. There,he reinterpreted Alexander Calder’s kinetic sculptures in the form ofeveryday objects like Reebok Classic trainers and the remnants of adiscarded lunch. His 2014 show at Mary Mary, “Chester Man,” alludedto the imposed permanence of ancient museum artifacts.
“My work draws on being British and certain specific uses of language,”says Wine. The titles he chooses are but one example of his interest in theeveryday. (Recent artworks have included The whole vibe of everything andI can like anything (both 2015).) “The idea for me is that if you are tellinga story, there’s an opportunity with the text to describe somethingoutside the art that completely informs the way the work is received.” Hesays this stems from wanting to “be as generous as possible with the work,to communicate with large audience. I want it to feel accessible to the
I can like anything, 2015Jesse Wine
Limoncello
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everyman.”
Photos by Kate Berry for Artsy.
Born in 1983, Wine studied at Camberwell College of Arts, two milessouth of “the Elephant,” and on the river at the Royal College of Art(RCA) for his Sculpture MA in Battersea. He encountered ceramics forthe first time by accident, during an exchange program with New York’sHunter College organized by the RCA. He explains in a 2014 interviewwith Art Papers that he had missed every “interesting” class due to a“bureaucratic fuck up”—and ended up taking “Clay and Casting”instead. “It taught me everything,” he says.
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Photo by Kate Berry for Artsy.
Fast forward to Wine’s debut solo show at Limoncello in 2012, which
threw critics a curve ball. A raised walkway reimagined the gallery as a
Japanese Zen garden, the floor covered in gravel and Wine’s
immaculately finished objects—basket structures, slathered in glaze; other
pieces round, humpy or hive-like. He already evinced an obsessive care in
the craft of making, something he often describes in spiritual terms. “You
are somehow reflecting your psychological and social position in life at
any given moment,” he says of his relationship with his material, though
this sentiment informs everything he does. “I spend a large part of the
day in a studio alone, which I love, don’t get me wrong. But it is
therapy.”
If introspection is the key to his production process, then the BALTIC
show saw Wine’s gaze turn further inwards. In an accompanying video
produced by the gallery for the show, the artist talks through the
finishing touches to his 2014 self portrait Young man red eating dinner—a
Calder-infused ceramic and steel mobile depicting Wine’s studio
workwear of red vest, cap, shorts, shoes, and mug of tea plus pasta
dinner. The piece and others within its series appear as if a puppet
version of the artist. And in the various iterations, Wine is seen eating,
working, or choosing what to wear.
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Earlier this year, Wine’s Limoncello show saw the artist experiment withflat, painterly ceramics. Four works, assembled from around 40 tiles,hung on the gallery’s walls, the pieces once again reflective of his own life.A section of his bedroom floor was depicted with household paints, whileanother piece saw him resurrect his favored studio mug, blended with astill life by Italian painter and printmaker Giorgio Morandi, one of hisartistic heroes. “I thought I would actively approach it as if I was paintingby giving myself things to paint, like flat surfaces,” he says of thedeparture. “I was curious to see how it would operate. I had the idea thatglaze could be superior to paint.”
Young man red in the studio, 2014Jesse Wine
Limoncello
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Wine found his Elephant and Castle studio with friends from the RCA
after graduating in 2010. As his own practice has grown in scale, his space
has expanded, and his studio-mates have dwindled. Here he continues to
run a project space, PLAZAPLAZA, though his own practice is currently
in overdrive. When he first moved in, he says he and his friends ran a
regular bar, a “speakeasy” with an open door policy, out of the studio
space. That brings us full circle, to the creation of a new community—
albeit one mainly within the confines of a specific creative class—that fed
off, and legitimately added to, the teeming microcosm around it.
Superdry II, 2015 Superdry I, 2015
Jesse Wine
Limoncello
Jesse Wine
Limoncello
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Photos by Kate Berry for Artsy.
“This area is one of the few genuinely successful culturally diverse placesin central London,” says Wine. “It’s the old feeling of London before itbecame culturally flattened or deadened. [We had] a manifesto for whatwe wanted the place to be—open, in a way.” He credits the space and itsconstant turnover of artists and projects with some of his own currentdrive: “To have somewhere where people are finishing shows in yourstudio is really fucking helpful. It gets you in the habit of finishingthings.”
—Rob Sharp
See more Artists to Watch at Frieze London.See more Artists to Watch at Frieze London.
Explore Frieze London 2015 on Artsy.Explore Frieze London 2015 on Artsy.
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